Last July our Hipster of the Decade, blogger Carles, arbitrarily coined a genre known as chillwave or glo-fi. It's now on iTunes, which is as close as possible to an official seal. So what makes a genre?

They're solo acts or minimal bands, often with a laptop at their core, and they trade on memories of electropop from the 1980s, with bouncing, blipping dance-music hooks (and often weaker lead voices). It's recession-era music: low-budget and danceable.

In a blog post he was more scathing, saying acts he saw at the South by Southwest Festival bounced on as mindlessly "as a bobble-head doll," and were "annoyingly noncommittal... a hedged, hipster imitation of the pop they're not brash enough to make."

The Journal, meanwhile, made this nod to the arbitrary-ness of writing an article about something that came out of Carles' head.

Whereas musical movements were once determined by a city or venue where the bands congregated, "now it's just a blogger or some journalist that can find three or four random bands around the country and tie together a few commonalities between them and call it a genre," said Alan Palomo of Neon Indian.

And then immediately below that, blew that caveat out of the water by writing a guide to it. In England, the Guardian picked up on the blog chatter and wrote something too.

And now it's on iTunes. Expect your mother to ask about chillwave in 8, 7, 6, 5...